Microsoft wants you to share WinMo apps with yourself; others, not so much

With the App Store, App Catalog, App World, Ovi Store, and all shades of third-party mobile software stores out in the wild, Microsoft’s undoubtedly looking at Windows Marketplace as being one of the more important features it’s bringing to the table in the fanfare surrounding WinMo 6.5. Differentiating features that Redmond can pimp against the competition — all of which sound like identical concepts from a quick glance on paper — could be a key offensive weapon in keeping 6.5 playing with the big boys long enough to get WinMo 7 out of the door, but one thing we now know won’t be a part of that is a useful app sharing concept. As it was originally understood, the idea was that the Windows Marketplace would allow you to share purchased apps with up to a total of five devices, meaning friends, family, and coworkers could exchange wares. Seems like a good idea to casually spread the word about great software, but Microsoft’s now followed up to clarify: turns out you’ll only be able to share the app with five of your own phones, the idea being that you’ll be able to easily transfer software licenses when you upgrade to new hardware. To verify the link, you’ll need to use the same Windows Live ID on all devices — so unless you plan on sharing your htc_blue_angel_4_lyfe@hotmail.com with everyone you know, you’re out of luck.

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Microsoft wants you to share WinMo apps with yourself; others, not so much originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 23 May 2009 12:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Touch Pro2 for Sprint spotted in the wild, mid-June release?

We’ve known that a version of the HTC Rhodium / Touch Pro2 was inbound for Sprint at some point this summer (assuming no delays), but would mark the first time we’ve seen one in what appears to be finished production trim. A SprintUsers poster claims that the global roaming-capable device should be hitting retail mid-June with the portrait QWERTY Snap following in July — and yes, we’d be more inclined to ignore the noise had said poster not also provided the glorious pictures. Looking good — really good, actually — but good luck tearing any eyes away from the Pre kiosks in the stores next month, HTC.

[Thanks, David D.]

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HTC Touch Pro2 for Sprint spotted in the wild, mid-June release? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 May 2009 18:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft’s beta My Phone service for Windows Mobile now free to all

Go ‘n get it! Microsoft’s My Phone service is now ready for all Windows Mobile users to test. The beta service syncs any Windows Mobile 6+ phone to Microsoft’s 200MB per person cloud. That includes contacts, calendars, tasks, photos, text messages, music, videos, and more. In essence, anything on the My Phone website is on the phone and vice versa. Hey free is free and this is a goodie.

[Via SlashPhone]

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Microsoft’s beta My Phone service for Windows Mobile now free to all originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 May 2009 04:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Firefox Fennec now available for WinMo in alpha form

Up until now, if you wanted Mozilla’s dearly anticipated mobile port, you had a couple options: you could buy a Nokia N800 / N810, or you could score a Touch Pro and deal with a build ominously described as pre-alpha. Now the software’s finally matured enough to hit Alpha 1 status — although the Touch Pro requirement’s still in place, so you fake Touch Viva owners are sadly still have to hold off a while longer. The major release improves memory behavior, moves the UI to a CSS-based solution that’ll make resolution independence easier, and — here’s the biggie — adds support for add-ons, so it seems like it’s a worthwhile download if you’re doing even a modicum of browsing from your phone. Next up, Mozilla plans to tackle overall Fennec performance on the WinMo platform head-on; maybe they’d care to have a go at Firefox 3 while they’re at it?

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Firefox Fennec now available for WinMo in alpha form originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 May 2009 17:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Jack comes to AT&T on May 19, $99.99 on contract

The BlackJack II’s been looking a little long in the tooth for a while now, and it’s been made pretty clear that the Epix isn’t the direct replacement — so what is? Behold the i637 Jack (not to be confused with the… uh, Jack), which has just been made official with a 3.2 megapixel camera and video recording, AGPS, WiFi, microSD expansion, 256MB of RAM, triband HSDPA / quadband EDGE, and the all-too-typical QVGA display. Like its forebears, the Jack naturally features a full QWERTY keyboard; it’ll launch with Windows Mobile 6.1 but will be fully upgradeable to 6.5. Look for it in stores on May 19 for $99.99 on a new two-year contract after rebate. AT&T’s already got a unit (not to say that should come as any surprise) and they’re showing it off on video — check it out after the break.

Continue reading Samsung Jack comes to AT&T on May 19, $99.99 on contract

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Samsung Jack comes to AT&T on May 19, $99.99 on contract originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 May 2009 10:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The first rule of Windows Marketplace for Mobile is that you don’t subvert Windows Marketplace for Mobile

The first rule of Windows Marketplace for Mobile is that you don't subvert Windows Marketplace for MobileUp until now, Microsoft has taken a rather laissez faire attitude toward application development — anyone with a copy of Visual Studio and half an ounce of coding know-how could whip up and share whatever little programs they want. That won’t be the case inside Windows Marketplace for Mobile, Microsoft’s answer to the App Store, and the company is now listing a number of guidelines that devs must follow for the fruits of their labor to be included. Top on the prohibited list? Apps that themselves sell other apps. Second rule of the Marketplace? No apps that link to apps that sell other apps. Also banned is VoIP over cellular networks, apps that run non-managed code (i.e. don’t stay inside the sandbox MS has set up), anything that distributes a user’s information, and downloads that are bigger than 10MB. Not mentioned? Anything to do with naughty content, meaning purveyors of explicit executables might not have to make concessions. Full list of 12 commandments after the break.

Update: In case you didn’t figure it out for yourself, Arnoud from Tweakers.net wrote in with confirmation that the no-VOIP rule is in place at the request of the providers.

[Warning: PDF read link]

Continue reading The first rule of Windows Marketplace for Mobile is that you don’t subvert Windows Marketplace for Mobile

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The first rule of Windows Marketplace for Mobile is that you don’t subvert Windows Marketplace for Mobile originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 May 2009 07:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Snap reviewed: QWERTY keyboard, Winmo 6.1, no great shakes

We know you’ve been dying to get your hands all over the HTC Snap… oh, wait. You haven’t? Well, neither have we — but no matter, ‘cos Smartphone Daily has a review, and they’ve filled us in on the luscious deets. For the uninitiated, this is a 2.4-inch, Windows Mobile 6.1, touchscreen deficient candybar, and something of a BlackBerry doppelganger (if only in the looks department), featuring WiFi and a camera. Wild, huh? Overall, the reviewer found it to be “decent” — if you’re looking for a “business device,” that is. The Inner Circle feature was singled out for some praise: little more than an Inbox filter for your, erm, “inner circle,” you have to wonder why a manufacturer hadn’t thought of it before. On the downside, he did find the inclusion of a TAB key (where the A key belongs) to be particularly annoying. This bad boy will go on sale this summer in Europe, at which time the S522 (as it’s known ’round here) should hit the shops Stateside. One more pic after the break.

[Via Slash Gear]

Continue reading HTC Snap reviewed: QWERTY keyboard, Winmo 6.1, no great shakes

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HTC Snap reviewed: QWERTY keyboard, Winmo 6.1, no great shakes originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 May 2009 14:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft reiterates what we knew: no first-party handset, no Zunephone

While avoiding the juicier questions surrounding the mystery of Project Pink and its potential ties to Verizon for maximizing Pink’s launch, a Microsoft spokesperson has issued new comments that reiterate the stance Redmond has held from time immemorial: there’s no Zunephone, and furthermore, there won’t be any Microsoft-branded phones.

Of course, the devil could lie in the precise wording, and the exact quote was as follows: “Microsoft is not going into the phone hardware business. Microsoft is not building a Zune-specific phone.” Just because there’s not a “Zune-specific phone” doesn’t mean you can’t steal some Zune tech for the phone business, and we have every reason to believe that Microsoft would want to be building Zune-esque features into Windows Mobile — you can start to see tiny slivers of that in 6.5 with the home screen design, for example — so we’re still pretty confident that Pink (or another project) will ultimately marry portions of the technology and branding. In other words: Zunephone, no; Zune on Windows Mobile, though? Yeah, sure, why not?

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Microsoft reiterates what we knew: no first-party handset, no Zunephone originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Apr 2009 03:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC’s XV6175 for Verizon outed in render form

Yo, T-Mobile, you guys might want to speed that Snap / Dash 2 / whatever along, because you’ve got a few carriers nipping at your heels with their own WinMo-based portrait QWERTY models fresh out of HTC’s foundry. There’s a whole jumble of codenames and model numbers used to identify this thing, but basically, you can look at the XV6175 as Verizon’s answer to the GSM-powered Snap and S522 — a device that’s been seen in Sprint’s roadmap as the Willow and in various regulatory agencies as the Cedar (ridiculous, yes, we know). We don’t have any better idea of when it might launch, but in the meanwhile, feast your eyes on this render we’ve unearthed — and enjoy the Verizon logo-free bezel while you can, because we’ll bet you a bazillion dollars that’s not lasting.

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HTC’s XV6175 for Verizon outed in render form originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Apr 2009 23:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Omnia Pro with landscape QWERTY coming this summer?

This is totally unsubstantiated, but also totally plausible — likely, even — so we wanted to pass along a hot rumor out of Italian site hdblog.it claiming that there’ll be a QWERTY-equipped Omnia Pro hitting the market in the coming months, and they’ve even crafted a mockup looking like the offspring of an F700 and an original Omnia to illustrate their point. Specifically, the rumor suggests that the Omnia Pro will run Windows Mobile 6.1 upgradeable to 6.5 — which might explain Sammy’s decision to back off the OmniaHD branding for the Symbian-powered i8950 — along with a 5 megapixel cam and sweet 3.5-inch WVGA AMOLED display. Considering that the old Omnia is widely considered to be one of the company’s better (and more successful) smartphones in recent memory, it certainly stands to reason that they’d want to carry on the legacy — and slapping on a sliding landscape keyboard seems like a no-brainer way to do it. To top things off, gossip has this sucker launching this summer for something in the range of €500 ($662), which throws it face-first into this summer’s superphone smackdown alongside the N97, the GSM Pre, and whatever Apple has up its sleeves. Fun time to be alive, isn’t it?

[Via Slashphone]

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Samsung Omnia Pro with landscape QWERTY coming this summer? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 26 Apr 2009 21:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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